Chapter 1:Introduction: Expanding the Boundaries of Environmental Labour StudiesPart I: HistoriesChapter 2: Labour and the Environment in IndiaChapter 3: Energy Transitions in the Global South: the Precarious Location of UnionsChapter 4: The New Struggles to be Born: The Difficult Birth of a Democratic Ecosocialist Working-Class Politics Chapter 5: The Green New Deal and Just Transition Frames within the American Labour MovementChapter 6: Working-Class Environmentalism: The Case of Northwest Timber WorkersChapter 7: Trade Unions and Environmental JusticePart II: Seeking Common GroundChapter 8: 'Beware of the Crocodile's Smile': Labour -Environmentalism in the Struggle to Achieve a Just Transition in South AfricaChapter 9: Fighting in the Name of Workers: Exploring the Dynamics of Labour-Environmental Conflicts in Kerala Chapter 10: Trade Union Politics for a Just Transition: Towards Consensus or Dissensus?Chapter 11: Climate Jobs Plans: A Mobilising Strategy in Search of AgencyChapter 12: The Role of Ecuadorian Working-Class Environmentalism in Promoting Environmental Justice: an Overview of the Hydrocarbon and Agricultural SectorsChapter 13: A Just Transition for All? A Debate on the Limits and Potentials of a Just Transition in CanadaPart III: Farmers, Commoners, CommunitiesChapter 14: Labouring the Commons. Amazonia's 'Extractive Reserves' and the Legacy of Chico MendesChapter 15: Connecting Individual Trajectories and Resistance Movements in BrazilChapter 16: Whose Labour, Whose Land? Indigenous and Labour Conflicts and Alliances over Resource Extraction Chapter 17: Commoning Labour, Labouring the Commons: Centring the Commons in Environmental Labour StudiesChapter 18: Agroecological Farmer Movements and Advocacy Coalitions in Sub-Saharan Africa: Between De-Politicisation and Re-PoliticisationChapter 19: Working-Class Environmentalism in the UK - Organising for Sustainability Beyond the WorkplacePart IV: Trade Unions and the StateChapter 20: A Just Transition Towards Environmental Sustainability for AllChapter 21: Labour Resistance against Fossil Fuel Subsidies Reform: Neoliberal Discourses and African Realities Chapter 22: Challenges and Prospects for Trade Union EnvironmentalismChapter 23: From 'Just Transition' to the 'Eco-Social State'Chapter 24: Environment, Labour and Health: The Ecological-Social Debts of China's Economic DevelopmentPart V: Organic IntellectualsChapter 25: Trade Union Environmentalists as Organic Intellectuals in the US, UK, and SpainChapter 26: Embedding Just Transition in the USA: The Long AmbivalenceChapter 27: Caring for Nature, Justice for Workers: Worldviews on the Relationship Between Labour, Nature, and JusticeChapter 28: Individuals Transforming Organisations: Spanish Environmental Policies in Comisiones ObrerasPart VI: Rethinking and broadening ConceptsChapter 29: The Commodification of Human Life: Labour, Energy, and Money in a Deteriorating BiosphereChapter 30: Workers, Trade Unions and the Imperial Mode of Living. Labour Environmentalism from the Perspective of Hegemony TheoryChapter 31: Andre Gorz's Labour-Based Political Ecology and its Legacy for the Twenty First CenturyChapter 32: Rethinking Labour/Work in a Degrowth SocietyChapter 33: Labour and Societal Relationships with Nature. Conceptual Implications for Trade UnionsChapter 34: Society - Labour - Nature. How to Think the Relationships?Chapter 35: Labour Centred Design for Sustainable and Just TransitionsChapter 36: Technology and the Future of Work: The Why, How and What of Production